article
To bind a person by a written contract, typically for a fixed period of apprenticeship or professional training. In a legal context, it can also mean to set forth specific charges or items in a formal document.
Beispiele
3 von 5She was articled to a firm of solicitors in London for three years to complete her qualification.
She was bound by a training contract to a law firm in London for three years to finish her qualification.
The candidate must be articled to a practicing chartered accountant before receiving their certification.
The applicant needs to be under a professional training contract with a working accountant before getting certified.
I heard he's getting articled to his uncle's engineering company next month.
I heard he is starting a formal training contract at his uncle's engineering firm next month.
Wortfamilie
Merkhilfe
Think of the 'articles' (clauses) of a contract. When you 'article' someone, you are putting them inside the 'articles' of that agreement.
Schnelles Quiz
To become a solicitor, she had to be ___ to a senior partner for several years of practical training.
Richtig!
Die richtige Antwort ist: articled
Beispiele
She was articled to a firm of solicitors in London for three years to complete her qualification.
everydayShe was bound by a training contract to a law firm in London for three years to finish her qualification.
The candidate must be articled to a practicing chartered accountant before receiving their certification.
formalThe applicant needs to be under a professional training contract with a working accountant before getting certified.
I heard he's getting articled to his uncle's engineering company next month.
informalI heard he is starting a formal training contract at his uncle's engineering firm next month.
Historical records indicate that the apprentice was articled to the master weaver in 1742.
academicHistory shows the student was legally bound to the expert weaver in the year 1742.
Our firm intends to article five new trainees during the upcoming fiscal year.
businessOur company plans to sign five new students to training contracts in the next business year.
Wortfamilie
Häufige Kollokationen
Häufige Phrasen
Articles of Association
The regulations governing a company's internal management
Articles of War
Regulations for the conduct and discipline of armed forces
Articles of Impeachment
The formal charges brought against a public official
Wird oft verwechselt mit
To articulate means to speak clearly or express ideas effectively, while to article means to bind by contract.
Nutzungshinweise
The verb 'article' is primarily used in British English and Commonwealth legal systems to describe the professional training process for lawyers and accountants.
Häufige Fehler
Learners often only know 'article' as a noun (a piece of writing or a grammar part) and may find the verb form confusing or overly formal.
Merkhilfe
Think of the 'articles' (clauses) of a contract. When you 'article' someone, you are putting them inside the 'articles' of that agreement.
Wortherkunft
From the Latin 'articulus', meaning a small joint or a distinct part of a whole, which evolved to mean specific points in a document.
Grammatikmuster
Kultureller Kontext
Refers to the traditional British system of professional entry known as 'serving one's articles'.
Schnelles Quiz
To become a solicitor, she had to be ___ to a senior partner for several years of practical training.
Richtig!
Die richtige Antwort ist: articled
Ähnliche Regeln
Verwandte Redewendungen
Verwandtes Vokabular
Ähnliche Wörter
to
A1Used to indicate the place, person, or thing that someone or something moves toward. It can also mark the recipient of an action or the limit of a range.
and
A1A primary conjunction used to connect words, phrases, or clauses that are grammatically equal. It indicates addition, a sequence of events, or a relationship between two things.
a
A1A word used before a singular noun that is not specific or is being mentioned for the first time. It is used only before words that begin with a consonant sound to indicate one of something.
that
A1This word is a demonstrative pronoun used to indicate a specific person, object, or idea that is further away in space or time from the speaker. It is also used to refer back to something that has already been mentioned or to introduce a clause that identifies something.
I
A1The pronoun 'I' is used by a speaker or writer to refer to themselves as the subject of a verb. It is the first-person singular subject pronoun in English and is always capitalized regardless of its position in a sentence.
for
A1Used to show who is intended to have or use something, or to explain the purpose or reason for an action. It is also frequently used to indicate a specific duration of time.
not
A1A function word used to express negation or denial. It is primarily used to make a sentence or phrase negative, often following an auxiliary verb or the verb 'to be'.
with
A1A preposition used to indicate that people or things are together, in the same place, or performing an action together. It can also describe the instrument used to perform an action or a characteristic that someone or something has.
he
A1A pronoun used to refer to a male person or animal that has already been mentioned or is easily identified. It functions as the subject of a sentence.
you
A1Used to refer to the person or people that the speaker is addressing. It is the second-person pronoun used for both singular and plural subjects and objects.
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